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The Profession
MEDICAL TECHNOLOGY (Clinical Laboratory Science) is
the profession devoted to the diagnosis and management
of illness by analysis of blood, body fluids, and tissues.
Medical Technologists are clinical laboratory scientists
who perform hundreds of laboratory tests that are used
by physicians to determine the cause of illness and
the extent of injury. Such tests can identify the most
appropriate medication, dosage, and response to treatment.
For example, a medical technologist may isolate a disease
causing bacteria and determine from tests which antibiotic
will be effective. Another technologist will measure
the concentration of the antibiotic in the patient's
blood in order to insure that the dosage is optimal
but not toxic. The clinical laboratory sciences are
composed of blood banking, chemistry, hematology, immunology,
and microbiology. The technologist who works in the
blood bank performs tests that determine if blood is
compatible for transfusion. In chemistry, tests are
performed that measure proteins, enzymes, hormones,
electrolytes and other important metabolites in the
blood plasma. The immunology lab evaluates the patient's
ability to respond to disease and measures antibodies
that can indicate infection or immunity. Medical technologists
in the microbiology lab isolate and identify disease
causing bacteria, fungi, and parasites. Medical technologists
working in hematology count and evaluate blood cells,
and perform tests that are essential for the management
of anemia, leukemia and coagulation disorders.

The Program
The BGSU program is accredited by the National Accrediting
Agency for Clinical Laboratory Science (NAACLS), 8410
W. Bryn Mawr Avenue, Suite 670, Chicago, Illinois 60631-3415.
Phone: (773) 714-8880. Students who complete the program
receive a Bachelor of Science in Medical Technology
and are eligible to sit for both national certification
examinations. Courses in the basic sciences, math, humanities
and social science comprise most of the first three
years of study. The senior year is devoted to professional
training and consists of three semesters. The first
two consist of lecture and laboratory courses in blood
banking, clinical chemistry, clinical immunology, hematology,
and microbiology. The final term is a six-month clinical
practicum at one of 10 affiliated medical centers. The
clinical phase is given at the Mercy-Integrated Laboratories,
Toledo, Ohio; St. Rita's New Vision Laboratories, Lima,
Ohio; Medical University of Ohio at Toledo; The Toledo
Hospital, Toledo, Ohio; Blanchard Valley Regional Health
Center, Findlay, Ohio; Fremont Memorial, Fremont, Ohio;
Fulton County Health Center, Wauseon, Ohio; Wood County
Hospital, Bowling Green, Ohio; Defiance Regional Hospital,
Defiance, Ohio, and Flower Hospital, Sylvania, Ohio.
Students who complete the first three years may apply
for acceptance to professional training during the Fall
term. Selection of applicants is made in early March.
The program has a capacity of 16 students.
Career Opportunities for Medical Technologists
MEDICAL TECHNOLOGY has grown exponentially over the
past two decades. In 1968 there were approximately 50,000
medical technologists certified by the American Society
of Clinical pathologists. Today, that number has reached
over 300,000. Advances in technology have created the
ability to measure trace substances that were unknown
less than a generation ago. New diagnostic techniques
utilizing DNA technology, image analysis, and computer
processing are on the frontier and are expected to improve
the diagnosis and treatment of cancer, heart disease,
and infection. Better techniques are being developed
to monitor medications used to control transplant rejection,
heart disease, psychiatric disorders, and many other
illnesses. Medical Technologists play important roles
in laboratory management. Many universities offer programs
of graduate study in clinical microbiology and chemistry,
and post baccalaureate training for specialist certifications
in each laboratory science is available at several health
care institutions and universities. Students who enjoy
their high school biology and chemistry labs will find
medical technology an attractive profession. Beginning
salaries in Northern Ohio are in the high thirties to
low forties. Demand for certified technologists is expected
to increase through the next decade. The U.S. Department
of Labor Bureau of Labor Statistics projects a need
for 13,200 new medical laboratory professionals each
year until 2012 to keep pace with testing demands and
retirements.
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